Thank you, Mr. Chair. Thank you to the three guests this afternoon, the witnesses, for taking the time to come here and present to committee.
My first question would be to both Tony Doyle and Mr. Cobb. Both of you referenced the capelin fishery and its importance to cod's survival and the cod stock in general. We heard the same thing from scientists in Ottawa last week when they presented to committee. As you see ups and downs in the capelin stock, you see the same trend in the cod stock.
Tony, you mentioned the capelin fishery again this year and in years past, the lateness of its coming and everything. What do you think we should be doing, as a government, when it comes to the capelin stock? As you say, everybody is focused on where the cod stock is—what it's doing, how it's growing, whether it's decreasing, what the biomass is—but from what we've heard from everybody who's presented to us, the capelin fishery is just as important.
I know there was a fishery this year. I passed by fish plants that were loading up transport trucks, fish containers and all, on the way for processing or whatever was going to be done with them.
Should we continue down that road? Where should the capelin fishery go as we're moving forward in trying to maintain and hopefully bring back the cod fishery?